12 Years After Its Debut On Hacked Xboxes, XBMC Changes Its Name To Kodi

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Back in 2002, a small group of developers whipped together an app that was meant to turn a hacked Xbox into a full-fledged media player, capable of playing all sorts of video and music content that the Xbox couldn’t handle out of the box. Reasonably, they dubbed the project “Xbox Media Player”.

They’ve spent the last decade moving away from that name; today, the last trace of it dies.

Over time, the name started to make less and less sense. Their little project turned into a hit amongst hardware hackers, and its functionality grew. As their userbase exploded, the project found itself on all sorts of platforms beyond the original Xbox — places like Windows, OS X, iOS, Android, and Linux. It was spun off into projects like Plex.

“Xbox Media Player” became “Xbox Media Center”. Then, dropping Xbox from the name altogether, “Xbox Media Center” became just “XBMC”.

Today, the name changes again. Ending any hint of its Xbox legacy, “XBMC” is now “Kodi”.

Why? The team behind the project gives two reasons:

When people ask what “XBMC” means, the answer no longer makes sense. The project is so far removed from the Xbox (it hasn’t worked on any Xbox since the first, and the most recent builds hardly run on the original Xbox anymore) that it just causes confusion.

Legal issues. Because the “XB” stood for “Xbox”, the team was never able to lock down a trademark. As a result, they felt they were always facing one “potential legal threat” or another. After consulting a team of lawyers that specialize in helping open source software developers, a name change was seemingly the best option.

Not mentioned, but certainly worth considering: if the team is thinking about trying to expand to a more mainstream audience (be it with dedicated hardware, licensing it to others, or whatever that might entail), “Kodi” is a whole lot more marketable than “XBMC”.